The repair and restoration of existing housing stocks is one of the most important challenges FEMA and its response and recovery partners face following a catastrophic housing disaster. All other housing decisions and programs hinge on this single variable. After hurricanes Katrina and Rita, there was simply not enough affordable housing left to allow many victims to remain near their communities. The Brookings Institution reported that in the months following Hurricane Katrina, the population of New Orleans might have fallen by as much as half. It’s not that people wanted to relocate outside the area; there just wasn’t enough housing to support the population.

when housing stocks are destroyed and have little prospect for quick repair, FEMA, state, and local officials should clearly communicate to stakeholders that there is not enough housing stock for everyone and that some will need to relocate to other communities. This will help individuals and families begin to rebuild their lives.

the “right to return” should be reaffirmed, but it will be rhetorical in lieu of secure legal and financial supports.... rebuilding lives in particular places, including the places evacuated, should reflect the mixed evidence on how poverty is linked to place, and people to the social worlds around them, not Potemkin Village notions of socially cohesive poor neighborhoods.

Whatever kind of post-Katrina city ultimately emerges, the hardest-hit (poorer and blacker) communities will remain displaced, psychologically and spatially. Souza's central argument is that any rebuilding effort should revolve around self-determination and informed decisions, combined with a sustained public commitment to making survivors whole. Had the Gulf Coast recovery process been more inclusive from the start, we'd have a clearer understanding of what the poor and people of color had to lose or gain in the rebuilding effort. But with the storm's ferocious momentum now dulled to political inertia, we may never know... until maybe the next disaster strikes. Image: Shawn Escofferey, Rockefeller Foundation New Orleans Initiative (via NPR)